The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 8, 1938, Page 4

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r\n'mmc every evening EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY at Second Entered in the Po: SUB CRIPTION RATES, Delivered by carricr in June livery of their pay Telephone Ne G \U‘|IH DK oF \\~l(‘\|l|| PRESS ftled to the use The republica i otherwise credit published he ULATION GUARANT ANY OTHER PUBLICATION. G-MEN ON THE TRAIL To Federal Bureau of I much of t » credit for stamping ou ourished to alarming propor ing which or two ago. There are still kidnapin ness which wa K cases 1o the nefariof d miob been curk s are behind prison bar fende many of the ¢ Now the F.BI. is directing attention tov cleaning ap another evil with which the country vice racket,' particularly to trafficking in young women has be ien, commonly known as th refer this old' und Dewey. the young New :¥ark presecutor, and specia mebsters, revea dollars in operating a vice raci Since that have spread out over the countr men are making a country-wide gain called itional attention was ndled millions that they el in New York to stamp ¢ sores ocial € ance. ste revelations have been the P Cc tentacles these vice ¢ cities, Just last week reaching into the small arrest was made here in Juneau in connecti an investigation being conducted in Seattle @dher ci tealized police power it is a fortunaic ies on the coast. thing th: Bhve developed in this country an arm of the F g-mmw v can reach over state and T torial boundaries and blast such Tacke are revealed in thi municipal, state and Territoria 1 are impotent vith such conditions due to their limited powers. & keteers haVe 10hg been aware of it. But When what we have come to term the G-men get on the f@ail, Uie gutler spavn scamper. " COOPERATION BETWEEN BVSINESS INTERESTS AND THF PRESIDENT Despite the rep ton from lime to time t and business interest little to back up the theory, political obser at the e of these trained reporters show of cooperation between the Pr at the are at de ording to exper; say, there is a @ Some resentment that has made itself apparent Congress because of report. Commenting on the situation, Arthur Krock political observer for the New York Times, makes point in these words: Behind that be is the knowledge that + * many of the most loyal supporters of the Ad- £ ministration in Congress have been disturbed % :tover the President’s ‘method of dealing with % the National Legislature. They do not like general discussions at which Mr. Roosevelt tells private groups ideas and plans with which he has not acquainted either his parliamentar leaders or Congress as a whole. They resent { private national committees, instructed to ad- 5 vise on questions with which Con is witn tl; Cunwneoe. nngn G the President jointly empowered to deal. in wartime are they inclined to tolerate such > critics an advisol w and Douglas for £1.25 per month against the whc goes through and in the Administration feel that legislat administr objection. The direct and specific ap- What can the government do for followed by d is able and willing to do in the D TO BE LARGER cism which f\ tiopal committes criticism came from radicals who see an im n.u call fascism, from constitutional tkinkers see the erection of another wall between Congress and the President, and from parlia- - leaders who object to that new bar- > further ground that their access barred rdless of the dispute over method greater show of cooperation be- sxecutive and the nationai eco- inierests than ever before. much approved except by those convinced that the things to effect eliminate indusirial and fin y regulate what remair \tion goes ter Kidnap- ons a year Minori > is Allen Joseph Ellender, junior me orld trade-a year age when Thom y earth Lucky Luciano and 1 who were not apprehended v and now the Federal roundup in an effort ; slodged from his poss it all about? Ellender is conducting | | gainst the antiy-lynching bill. He is also showing up the helpless He is pro what has come to be one of the ngliest lords ever one may think of the question of cen- eration of the e Tt seems obvious enough to anyone but est cleanup. Local authoritie to cope Federal power to ti s that emanate from Washing- ! ational admumistration ger points there is ational eapital. Rather, eater sident and la Buiness interests than ever before, And this desy e many conferences, they Says an Ohio weather forecast: outlock for the week beginning Monday: beginning of the week and again about Thursday.| /The temperature will probably average several de- normal, followed by colder about Fri- g :h, we suppose there probably will be | ight and darkn(n boy, Fung Kwok Keung, who was known in a village near Canten, ina, &3 “the white boy of Nam Hoi,” is pictured in Seattle, Wash., on hls y.to New York. Born in New York 19 years ago, after father, Joseph Rinehart, an American soldier, the lad was adopted hy Chlm ruuuntenr and sent to China. He was brought up as a y learned his true history. He speaks only il hnve to leain his pative language. Only / committee is ential system of a new Pri resent as derogatory of Congress. nator Bulkl of Ohio has a would make such a group of- sentiment of the Capitol seems to notion. If the President with it, many of his advisers in opposition would arise. development of separate con- eparate groups—the result to nd analyzed for Congressional ative action—does not develop iston as to what the would meet much of the criti- lowec suggestion of a na- it is significant that from several quarters: ion. of what This is ho have be- vernment can do covery—spend, al bigness, and nc appears that Dr. Townsend is going to have > month when he won't need the $200 pension hel.. long advocated. | ty Control (Cleveland Plain Dealer) speaking, the strong man of the| ber from | 19 days the former lieutenant of ey Long hds held the floor of what once was called “greatest deliberative body in the wo With the administration urging Congress to enact islation, with vital appropriation bills with a score of propc talks on and on and on. relieve hort periods by a pitving colleague sion of the floor. ess of the ng that the ecial session. 1t was abandoned 1t that a date would be set soon r the convening of the present session for con- bill. The date was set, the measure |* me up and Ellender turned on the oratory t FEBRUARY 8. Mrs. T. E. Hall® Jack Greves G L. Ingman Ha . MODERN s ETIQUETTE" : ||e TUESDAY, FEB. 8, 1938. BIRTHDAY 20YearsA20 | Horoscope The Empire extends congratula- |tions and best wishes today, tneir birthday anniversary, to the follow- Juneau High ] T C. P. Jenne {ball team defeated the visiting Met- | |t | | J. C Patterson Worobe D || Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Personeus. ssembly of Ged, angements for opening a read- ing rcom and mission in the By Roberta Lee tion of the old Peerles: turday the coming Who should be seated at the right and the left of the host at a formal dinner? | woman guest of honor| ,r.. Henry Brie was should be seated at the right of the ' v host, the woman guest who is second p, A. Biue with orange; green wit! ; yellow with purple. ion a Is it all right for the bridal LA attendants to linger in the vestibulc L. D. Henderson, Commissioner of | of the church, following the cere- { " ; it is not good form to do { Condit opening. in importance at his left. in the Labor Union Hall. | @ What are a few combinatior St of two colors that afford ngtural pye did much damage Ala Nenana At aboard t We Snow - s - DAILY LESSONS IN’ ENGLISH Graves during ‘The C By W. L. Gordon | i Man’s” close out of Words Often Misused: Say, *The falseness of Charles (a person) was vealed when the falsity of his'fi- res (a thing) ,was disclosed.” Often Mispronounced: Auxiliary. { Pronounce og-zil-ya both i's as in it, a unstressed, ac- q | cent second syllable Often Misspelled: Teas (plural of Tease (to annoy). Synonyms: Retrospect (noun) | retrospection, als pending | » welfare of millions of people, the| 13 e of the| greatest r’l'»' is not deliberative at all, when n| ;,m ses some bloc to throw it out of gear. rn filibuster against the anti-lynching ed in the s 1 agreem Word Study ‘Use a word three |times and it is ‘yours ¢ vocabulary word each day passion of hatred is so durable, that the surest prognostic of death in ¢ ck man is a wish for reconcilia- Bruyere. - o of the bill refrain from use of the cloture rule indicate a doubt on their part whether they have a two-thirds | to invoke the rule. ing advantage of this situation, the filibusters, talkative Louisianan, have held the Senate scarcely hope to defeat the bill on a think they may, however, force itsi to drop the measure for the present session would probably put the issue over till after the ; €lection and the assembling of a new Congress. The Plain Dealer believes that the ant bill should become a law. Regardless of one’s opinion of the proposal, however, it is clear that this attempt to filibuster the proposal to death amounts to a denial of majority rule in that branch of government ordin- | latily most given to defense of the democratic process. the cloture rule is unworkable, it should be ynching cannot believe that any issue now before gress is great enough te' justify 19 days of conver- ation by Allen Joseph Ellender, “The Ohio weather on Sn turday Divorce Asked CHICAGO, Ill., ¥eb. 8 Being beaten by one's husband in private is bad enough, but being beaten by him in public is something bound to cause talk, is the attitude of Mr Virginia Lyndon, nineteen, of Mid- lothian, She explained this to Judge Phil- ip J. Finnegan, when she appeared|’ Norman Becier, | with her la |seeking a divorce ffom Patrick Ly- !don of Midlothian. ‘But apparently Ithe beating had left no sting, for {Mrs, Lydon found tause for laugh- pter as she listened to other suits. | » Her complaint was that he ac-| costed her on the Illinois Centrol Railroad platform in Midlothian, and, in the presence of ‘other com- muters, “punched her so hard that he knocked her across the street. Judge Finnegan signed the de- cree. - Curing a cuugh WEATHERFORD, Okla., —J. C. Duerksen, rural remedy peddler, has one customer who is always ready for another bottle of cough syrup. The customer, Duerksen, says, is a Cheyenne Indian who pours it on his breakfast hotcakes. —e———— “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. a senator | ri, 0 as in or recollection, reminis- Let us in- astering s word: % sign; symptom. “THhe & D 1 Nuys proposal for bringing |y task of ending lynching should, r a reasorable debate on its merits, be by { to a vote and its fate settled. The fact of the filin {indicates that foes of the bill realize it will be passed if allowed to reach a vote. The fact that the friends LOOK and LEARN By A. C. Gordon ght | which serves for heating and the cooling, have the same the United States so son and Dixon line? the Atlantic or the Pacific Coast? Columbus ever on me mam)and of North Americs o Otto Lilienthal, a German. made \the first successful flight in a man (carrying glider in 1891. This gndcr;' was a bird-shaped appartus made 01 wxllow wood with waxed sheeting!* Rain at the | frrrr s e “The Store for Men” SABINS | Front St.—Triangle Bldg. ‘TELEPHONE 212 two devices, one ©of is the largest city in s Y% Snies By h of the Ma- New Yorke years penal s ANSWERS Raciatons 5 sodator w o | BODDING TRANSFER From The Fmplu FEBRUARY 8, 1918 School basket- katla team by a score of 30 to 11 The members of the Fire Depart- ment were to meet this niszm complete arrangements for nual ball on Lincoln’s birthday had complet- ! Transportation problems will oc- nd the re to make short *Ibe enacted that is beneficial to rail- ewell by the Catholic ladies of | uglas at a card party and dance {now comes under a favorabie dire the | round house and machine shops of | ka Engineering returned from Ketchikan | steamer Spokane \er Report—High 30; > Cold weather prmmir,; is yours| at a real saving now s ~ imperative demands winter outdoor clothes. - > In English Jail V| Persons whose birthdate it is have rvitude in London’s Which has the higher tides, Old Bailey for the robbery of money and jewels worth more than $75,000. What is the annual consump- He entered the home of Mrs. Milli- tion of bggg in the United States? tent Hesketh-Wright in swank Park Lane, and at pistol point escaped with the loot. i; Jeum Retailers’ Association, are co- | buildiny automo- MARINE , as Vice President Dawes demanded more | b,,p"mg,,‘;o‘,"‘c;‘;*““‘:“"e“" e "1 pumpING than a dozen years ago. The right of ited debate | e ) i : g unlimited debate Baltimore, Md, 11 Rock—Coal Hauling is a fine theory which habitually breaks down in a 3. The Pacific Ct;ast i Stove—Fuel Oil Delivery 4. About 832,000,000 dozen. ! > P GARBAGE HAULED F TOP NOTCH FOR FINE FOOD Luncheons 50c Dinners 65¢ e Reasonable Monthly Rates E. 0. DAVIS | ) Fhone 4753 —3 PERCY’S CAFE Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candy COFFEE SHOP Percy Reynolds, Manager }‘who obviously have consumed more frrrrrereraeereeeeeeeee—s alcobol than Is conducive Valentines| ATTHES &N FIVE and TEN 1 Mexico 29 years. | - e Lode and placer location notices| {for sale at The Empire Office. | ! {I| BEAUTY . SALON The B. M. Behrends Bank Juneau, Alaska COMMERCIAL and SAVINGS Resources Qver Tv;o and One-Half Million Dollars “The stars incline but do not compel” WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1938 Benefic aspects rule poweriully today, according to trology. It i a day partly favorable for every form of executive work, helpful alike to workers with hands or brains. Labor comes under a rule making {for compromises and for a 'better system of cooperation with capital. Much work is forecast for mills and tactories. Whatever is constructive should be pushed diously. Much| building of machinery is forecast. leupy attention and legislation will ways. Freighting questions will be enacted that is beneficial to rail- {ways. Freighting questions will be preme interest s stimulating to American srise is predicted. Big business {of s eni ition of the stars. Evidence of sta-| bilization is to be manifested next| month, | Projects of great magnitude are| be greatly increased this year. (attention with other important is-| - |sues of public moment. Starving)| 'populations will start opposition to| lerop control theories as they are! {put into practice. i {to be launched, according to the| | | Directory @ .’ | |scers. Mining and oil drilling will| | Dr. Jutlson Whlther DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER DENTISTS Blomgren Building PHONE 56 Hours 9 am, to 8 pm. | Dr. Charles P. Jenne | DENTIST | Rooms 8 and 9, Valentine Bldg. | TELEPHONE 176 | Dr. Richard Williams | DENTIST ! OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN BUILDING CHIROPRACTOR Drugless Physician Office hours: 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. ©HONE 667 Food questions” again will divide' sy { China and Spain are to pres "‘"1\ s many die in torn areas. tamine-stricken, wa | ithe augury of a year of prosperity| |that enables many dreams to come {true. The old will benetit. i : Children born on this day prob- {ably will‘be generous and keenly in-| telligent. Subjects of this sign usu- ally have literary or artistic talents of unusual quality George Ade,writer, was born on this day 1866. Others who have cele- brated as a birthday include Ai Lowell, American poectess, 1872; General John A. Logan, Civil War commander and statesman, 1826 (Copyright, 1938) - Immigrant Colonies Keep Frontier Alive NEW \ORK F‘ob 8.—“Frontie: Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 465 DR. H. VANCE STEOPATH Consultation and examination free. Hours 10 to 12; 1 to 5; 7 to 9:30 by appointment. Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St. Phone 17'1 | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. i Graduate Los Angeles College of Optometry and | Opthalmology ¥ Glasses Fitted Lenses Ground characteristics are usually found in — immigrant colonies of unskilled laborers in America, according to a social study of Pittsburgh published by the Columbia University Press. These are usually a saloon, dance hall and boarding house. Chief center of such a community’s life is the hall, used for weddings and other festivities. The halls are found in every community in Alleghany County where nationality groups live in sufficient numbers to finance such an enterprise, the study shows. Drunken Drivers Refused Gasoline COLUMBUS, O. Feb. 8.—Mem- bers of the Franklin County Petro- ~ operating with police officials in' * cutting down the heavy traffic fa- ¥ |tality toll that has placed Colum- bus at the top of the tratfic death and 200,000 population. } | The group has voted vmmmouslyl { The group has coted uxmmmously ‘agamst selling gasoline to drivers| ‘nnd careful driving. —_————e— Yellow fever was eradicated from Cubu in 1899. ——————— Pomrm Diaz was President oli | Phone 723—————115-2nd St. THE ROYAL —— | OPEN EVENINGS | “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You should be i coming to us.” B Health Foods Center | BATTLE CREEK, HAUSER to sate ks i WHEN IN A HURRY CALL COLE FOR OIL | 34 plus or 27 gravity, in any | amount . . . QUICK! COLE TRANSFER Phone 3441 or Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson OPTOMETRIST Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry Shop Phone Green 331 FINE Watch and Jewelry Repalring at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN S. FRANKLIN STREET | ON THE MEZZANINE T HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP LYLAH WILSON Contoure Telephone X-Er-Vac 538 | \ | SIGRID’S BEAUTY SALON “YOUR APPEARANCE IS OUR RESPONSIBILITY” Shattuck Bldg. Phone 318 JUNEAU | MELODY HOUSE Music and Electric Appliances (Next Gastineau Hotel) Mrs. Pigg Phone 65 Alaska Music Supply Arthur M, Uggen, Manager Pianos—Musical Instruments and Supplies Phone 206 122 W. Second - Try the Empire chssflleds for results. UNT JUNEAU LOD PROFESSIONAL FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 »m. Visiting brothers welcome. N. C. BAN- FIELD, Exalted Ruler: M. H. SIDES, Secre- tary. 0. 147 Second and fourth Monday of each month G in Scottish Rite Temple i beginning at 7:30 p.m. DANIEL ROSS, Wor- shipful Master; JAMES W. LE" VERS, Serretary REBEKAHS Perseverance Lodge mou. 2 A meets every second and fourth Wednes- 1OOF. Hall BETTY Mc- CORMICK, Noble Grand; RUTH BLAKE, Secretary. DRUGS ) N N ) \ \ \ s N PUROLA REMEDIES 3 PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- | FULLY COMPOUNDED 2 ) Front Street Next Colisem PHONE 97—Free Delivery your Reliable pharmacists compound prescrip- tions. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. 3 “Tomorrow'’s Styles Home of Hart Schaffner and el e | Hollmann’s Pharmacy i 201 Seward St. PRESCRIPTIONS CARWULL‘I | FRESH DRUGS ! e | 2 | | Engineers—Contractors = Today” H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” Marx Clothing COMPOUNDED FROM J. B. WARRACK JUNEAU | Audit—Tax and System Service JAMES C. COOPER, Sou he e Saiigie Public Stenographer SPECIALIZING In French and Italian Dinners GASTINEAU CAFE | Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. L R s Empire classifieds pay. AND OTHER DIETETIC ¥FOODS | 230 Franklin St. Juneau Telephone 62 | Alaska Federal Savings and Lean Association ° Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718——FPhone 3 OFFICE—119 Seward St. 'COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS i ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on The First National Bank JUNEAU i (4 CAPITAL—$50,000 SURPLUS—$100,000 ° !

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